Department of General Practice, Faculty of Medicine of Nantes, 1 rue G. Veil, Nantes Cedex 1, 44035, France.
Department of Epidemiology and Biostatistics, Nantes University Hospital, 85 rue Saint Jacques, Nantes Cedex 1, 44093, France.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2024 May 24;24(1):660. doi: 10.1186/s12913-024-11106-9.
Difficulty obtaining a dermatological consultation is an obstacle to the early diagnosis of melanoma. On the one hand, patients survival depends on the lesion thickness at the time of diagnosis. On the other hand, dermatologists treat many patients with benign lesions. Optimizing patient care pathways is a major concern. The aim of the present study was to assess whether the e-mail transmission of photographs of suspected melanoma lesions between general practitioners (GPs) and dermatologists reduces the time to dermatological consultation for patients whose suspicious skin lesions ultimately require resection.
We conducted a cluster-randomized controlled study in primary care involving 51 French GPs between April 2017 and August 2019. A total of 250 patients referred to a dermatologist for a suspected melanoma lesion were included GPs were randomized to either the smartphone arm or the usual care arm. In the smartphone arm, the GPs referred patients to the dermatologist by sending 2 photographs of the suspicious lesion using their smartphone. The dermatologist then had to set up an appointment at an appropriate time. In the usual care arm, GPs referred patients to a dermatologist according to their usual practice. The primary outcome was the time to dermatological consultation for patients whose lesion ultimately required resection.
57 GPs volunteered were randomized (27 to the smartphone arm, and 30 to the usual care arm). A total of 125 patients were included in each arm (mean age: 49.8 years; 53% women) and followed 8 months. Twenty-three dermatologists participated in the study. The time to dermatological consultation for patients whose suspicious skin lesion required resection was 56.5 days in the smartphone arm and 63.7 days in the usual care arm (mean adjusted time reduction: -18.5 days, 95% CI [-74.1;23.5], p = .53).
The e-mail transmission of photographs from GPs to dermatologists did not improve the dermatological management of patients whose suspicious skin lesions ultimately required resection. Further research is needed to validate quality criteria that might be useful for tele-expertise in dermatology.
Registered on ClinicalTrials.gov under reference number NCT03137511 (May 2, 2017).
难以获得皮肤科咨询是早期诊断黑色素瘤的障碍。一方面,患者的生存取决于诊断时病变的厚度。另一方面,皮肤科医生治疗许多患有良性病变的患者。优化患者护理途径是一个主要关注点。本研究的目的是评估普通科医生(GP)与皮肤科医生之间通过电子邮件传输疑似黑色素瘤病变的照片是否可以减少需要切除的可疑皮肤病变患者的皮肤科咨询时间。
我们在初级保健中进行了一项涉及 51 名法国 GP 的集群随机对照研究,时间为 2017 年 4 月至 2019 年 8 月。共有 250 名因疑似黑色素瘤病变而转介给皮肤科医生的患者纳入研究。GP 被随机分为智能手机组或常规护理组。在智能手机组中,GP 使用他们的智能手机发送 2 张可疑病变的照片将患者转介给皮肤科医生。然后,皮肤科医生必须在适当的时间安排预约。在常规护理组中,GP 按照其常规做法将患者转介给皮肤科医生。主要结局是最终需要切除病变的患者的皮肤科咨询时间。
57 名自愿参加的 GP 被随机分组(智能手机组 27 名,常规护理组 30 名)。每个组各纳入 125 名患者(平均年龄:49.8 岁;53%为女性),并随访 8 个月。共有 23 名皮肤科医生参与了这项研究。需要切除的可疑皮肤病变患者的皮肤科咨询时间在智能手机组为 56.5 天,在常规护理组为 63.7 天(平均调整时间减少:-18.5 天,95%CI[-74.1;23.5],p=0.53)。
GP 向皮肤科医生发送照片的电子邮件传输并未改善最终需要切除的可疑皮肤病变患者的皮肤科治疗。需要进一步研究以验证可能对皮肤科远程专家咨询有用的质量标准。
于 2017 年 5 月 2 日在 ClinicalTrials.gov 上注册,注册号为 NCT03137511。